Breaking the silence on Brexit
Keir Starmer is right to pursue a “reset” with the EU. But he risks pleasing no one.
By
Keir Starmer is right to pursue a “reset” with the EU. But he risks pleasing no one.
By
Write to [email protected] to have your thoughts voiced in the New Statesman magazine.
By
Your weekly dose of gossip from around Westminster.
By
His tariffs could hurt Americans as much as the countries he is targeting.
By
Also this week: The Wild Robot’s ode to mums and the triumph of Beyoncé’s Cowboy Carter.
By
The former Conservative cabinet minister – and life peer – on the ancien régime.
By
Keir Starmer must rebuild the UK’s enfeebled armed forces – but he faces an almighty row first.
By
In the wake of Trump’s victory, Nigel Farage is upbeat and promising “the biggest political change this country has…
By
Even the radical architects of Project 2025 didn’t propose what Elon Musk is doing to US democracy.
By
Also this week: Trump’s Pentagon press purge and a new mission for Toby Jones.
By
Criminalising the use of a woman’s image without her consent shouldn’t be a complex issue.
By
China and America’s AI battle is about more than just tech supremacy – it’s about controlling the future.
By
What happens when a drug that can save lives could also ruin them?
By
The folklorists’ fairy tales, in which moral laws are suspended and violence abounds, were no stranger than the progressive…
By
An account of the Labour Party’s rise to power presents the PM as a man with a deep aversion…
By
The novels portrayed the working woman of the Nineties as a hot mess. By laughing at her, we laughed…
By
A new poem by Kim Moore.
By
Also featuring The Way Ancient Greeks Matters by Reviel Netz and Gary Lineker: A Portrait of a Football Icon.
By
As with all the Nobel Prize-winning South Korean writer’s stories, We Do Not Part rejects escapism to reach into…
By
The singer who embodied the Swinging Sixties in her youth gained a power in her later years that suited…
By
The director risks imprisonment with this film, which reveals the brutality of tyranny in Iran following the 2022 Women,…
By
The Motherland spin-off’s star returns diminished but undimmed.
By
The BBC podcast At Your Own Peril explores the history of risk and the importance of disaster planning.
By
The British surrealist Ithell Colquhoun combined magic and mythology to create art from buried folklore.
By
On all sides the urban machine is operating at full tilt, churning out volcanic volumes of steam and fumes.
By
Rawlsian social justice is the bedrock of contemporary liberalism.
By
There is a term used in the council for people like this: solutionisers.
By
When the pizza arrived mid sex scene, I didn’t know whether to laugh or cry.
By
This column – which, though named after a line in Shakespeare’s “Richard II”, refers to the whole of Britain…
ByPlease email [email protected] if you would like to be featured.
By
The neurologist on the science of subjectivity, and the irony of sophisticated tech that makes simple jobs harder.
By